🧠 What if the most used blockchain by governments wasn't Ethereum... or Solana?
It's not the most viral, nor the loudest. It doesn't distribute absurd airdrops nor lives off the hype. But while the market plays with dogcoins, it signs agreements with countries. It's called Algorand. And you're probably not even looking at it.
It was born from the mind of Silvio Micali, Turing Award winner, MIT professor, pioneer in modern cryptography. He chose to create a network that wouldn't fail, that wouldn't lie, that simply worked.
And while other networks struggle for visibility, Algorand works quietly with real governments. In Sierra Leone, it was used for digital elections. In Italy, to certify academic degrees. In El Salvador, for social payments. Central banks are already testing its technology to issue CBDCs. It was also the official blockchain of FIFA. It has over 30 million active addresses. And it still hasn't made noise.
It's not a promise, it's infrastructure. It doesn't speculate, it resolves.
And under the hood, real Pure Proof of Stake, without VIP validators. Finality in less than 4 seconds, with no possibility of forks. Ridiculously low transaction costs, ideal for micropayments and public services. Smart contracts on layer 1, powerful and secure. Algorand Standard Assets (ASA) to tokenize anything without losing efficiency. Atomic Transfers to send multiple assets in a single transaction. Real interoperability, without patches. Compatible with ISO 20022, ready to integrate with banks, governments, and global financial systems.
Because the technologies that change the world don't arrive with noise. They arrive with purpose.